Okay, so my answer gets deleted because I used the word I believe. Fine then. I hope you failed whatever quiz this was for
The answer was scale by the way.
Hi,
www.dictionary.com is a great place to look up definitions, but I'll give you a really brief and basic overview.
Imagery is the rhetorical tool writers use to creates mental images in a writer's mind by using descriptive words. Denotation and connotation are tricky but fun; denotation is the exact meaning of a word, while connotation is the mood it invokes or how it comes across. For instance, "tug" and "heave" have the same denotation or definition, but "heave" sounds a lot more laborious or hard, which makes gives it a different connotation.
You can find your own examples in the poem (you got this!), but here's a quick guideline:
For imagery, find a line or phrase that is so descriptive, you can almost see it.
For denotation and connotation, find two words whose meanings are similar but that take on different tones.
As for supporting your answers with the Declaration of Emancipation, you'll have to do your research. I'll help clarify, but ultimately, the answer's yours :)
He should have a phone conference or reschedule the meeting Answer:
Explanation:
The most important limitation of stone is the lack of tensile strength, the capacity of a material to withstand binding.
Stone is durable and impressive stuff, but it's also challenging to quarry, and heavy to move, and it has tension and stress limitations. Where there are resources available to excavate and cut it precisely, stone can be an extremely strong and useful natural material. Unlike brick, it can be stacked without mortar and support heavy vertical loads. Stone resists deforming, weathers the elements well, withstands fire and helps maintain stable interior environments.
Look back at a time where you really screwed things up, but you learned something
then basically just tell them a time where you screwed up and survived
(you could just take the time that you messed up and make up a lesson you learned, you don't actually have to learn it, it just has to sound believable)